
In addition, the receipt of this podcast by any listener is not to be taken as constituting the giving of investment advice by Goldman Sachs to that listener, nor to constitute such person a client of any Goldman Sachs entity. The views expressed in this podcast are not necessarily those of Goldman Sachs, and Goldman Sachs is not providing any financial, economic, legal, accounting or tax advice or recommendations in this podcast. Neither Goldman Sachs nor any of its affiliates makes any representation or warranty, as to the accuracy or completeness of the statements or any information contained in this podcast and any liability therefore (including in respect of direct, indirect or consequential loss or damage) is expressly disclaimed. The information contained in this podcast is not financial research nor a product of Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research. This podcast should not be copied, distributed, published or reproduced, in whole or in part. This podcast was recorded on October 3, 2017. He shares how his path has evolved over the course of his career and his thoughts on today's market environment. But it did introduce him to his first mentor, and the concept of investing in other people's success that has been a defining theme of his three decades in finance. "He had the perfect temperament to be a judge," Dickler said.Goldman Sachs President Harvey Schwartz on Mentorship, Markets and More Harvey Schwartz, president and co-COO of Goldman Sachs, took a year off after high school, though it wasn't part of any kind of grand plan - he readily admits there wasn't one. Schwartz when she became a traffic court judge. "He was extremely wise and had a great ability to weigh all the pros and cons," said Grace Dickler, presiding judge in the Circuit Court's Domestic Relations Division, who met Mr. I thought it would be a great idea to get Harveys. He has been the President for the Georgia Sporting Clays Association for 9 years and continues to help grow the sport across the state. He was presiding judge there when he retired. Harvey has been shooting clay targets for 15 years. Schwartz left Skokie in 1987 to become a judge in Chicago Traffic Court, where he eventually became supervising judge.Īfter eight years there, he moved to the Third Municipal District of the Circuit Court of Cook County in Rolling Meadows. Schwartz's work for Skokie also included helping to draft an affordable housing ordinance aimed at providing housing opportunities for people with low or moderate incomes and rules governing signs and appearance issues long before such regulations were common. Rigoni said it was rumored that the change in location was at least in part the result of behind-the-scenes negotiations between Chicago officials and Mr. "He really was ahead of his time."įederal courts eventually struck down the ordinances as restricting First Amendment free speech rights, but soon after that Collin announced that he and his group would not march in Skokie, but would march in Chicago instead.

"Harvey came up with the idea for those three ordinances," Rigoni said. See all books authored by Harvey Schwartz, including Rattan Furniture: Tropical Comfort Throughout the House (Schiffer Book for Collectors and Designers. One required a large indemnity bond from the marchers, another prohibited the distribution of printed materials promoting hatred of groups of people, and the third prohibited demonstrations by people in military-style uniforms. Schwartz developed some legal roadblocks in the form of village ordinances. It also became clear that Skokie residents and outside groups would take to the streets if necessary to stop the march, so Mr. "He started out with the idea that we should let them march, thinking that in a half-hour or so, they'd be done and out of here," said Rigoni, an intern with the village at the time.īut he changed his mind, his wife said, after he saw a group of survivors outside Village Hall and realized what the proposed march was doing to them.
